Page 429 - The Toyota Way Fieldbook
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402                       THE TOYOTA WAY FIELDBOOK


            The kaizen project approach uses several specifically selected lean tools to
        address the exact process improvement purpose. Many of the problem-solving
        methods described in Chapter 13 are process improvement approaches. In that
        chapter we noted there are approaches to solving small, medium, and large
        problems. The medium problems are typically addressed by kaizen events or as
        Six Sigma projects outside of Toyota, as depicted in Figure 13-2 in that chapter.
        And Tables 13-1 to 13-3 show a variety of different approaches that Toyota uses for
        process improvement projects, including various types of cross-functional teams,
        Quality Circles, work groups under a group leader, and others. Depending on the
        project, these can be handled in different ways. It might be a very formal project
        assigned to a cross-functional team. It could be an assignment to an engineer who
        will pull together an ad hoc team. It could be a kaizen activity done by a work
        group with little outside help.
            There are some common characteristics of these process improvement activ-
        ities at Toyota:
           1. They are generally driven by hoshin kanri (policy deployment) objectives
              for the site that are linked to the site improvement objectives, which are
              linked to improvement objectives all the way up to the president of the
              company.
           2. The process improvement project follows the steps described in Chapters 13
              to 17. Ultimately, it will look like the problem-solving A3 report described
              in Chapter 18. It may be displayed on a board or a wall or actually on an A3
              report, but all the elements will be included (problem statement, improve-
              ment objectives, alternatives considered, selected alternatives, justification,
              results, additional actions to be taken).
           3. It will follow the Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle.
           4. It will be part of an organizational learning process, with key learning
              shared across the organization.
        Hot Projects Approach
        Every operation has some immediate and severe pain which eliminated making
        the problem solvers instant heroes. It could be a bottleneck operation that is
        constantly holding up schedule attainment. It could be major equipment that
        breaks down at the most inopportune times. Or perhaps quality problems lead
        to whole groups set up to do nothing but inspection and rework.
            Someone well trained in lean thinking and problem solving is well-equipped
        to quickly reduce this pain. In some cases companies use the one-week kaizen
        workshop as an approach to quickly analyze and solve these types of problems.
        As Figure 19-2 summarizes, there are both strengths and weaknesses to the hot
        projects approach.
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